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The Home Theater Companion: Buying, Installing, and Using Today's Audio-Visual Equipment

The Home Theater Companion: Buying, Installing, and Using Today's Audio-Visual EquipmentAuthor: Howard Ferstler
Publisher: Schirmer Books
Category: Book

List Price: $40.00
Buy Used: $4.30
as of 11/21/2009 13:55 CST details
You Save: $35.70 (89%)



New (2) Used (9) from $4.30

Seller: betterworldbooks_
Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars reviews
Sales Rank: 2083392

Media: Paperback
Edition: illustrated edition
Pages: 437
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.9
Dimensions (in): 9.5 x 7.6 x 1

ISBN: 0825672368
Dewey Decimal Number: 780
UPC: 752187427889
EAN: 9780825672361
ASIN: 0825672368

Publication Date: July 1997
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Customer Reviews:



5 out of 5 stars A must-have book for serious A-V users   March 11, 2002
Thomas D. Tyson III (High Point, NC United States)
Ferstler's latest book, The Home Theater Companion, is a practical and insigtful guide to Audio-Visual systems. It is easy reading because Ferstler has a knack for reducing complicated subject matter into easy-to-understand language for the lay user. One particular advantage to this book is the author's extensive knowledge of audio; from this, he has been able to clearly differentiate the good from the not-so-good in the sound portion of any A-V setup. There have been some insincere criticisms of Howard's book (likely by those who have not actually read it); however, once you have absorbed it and realize the scope of his work, you will be very pleased with what you learn about this complicated subject. One suggestion, however, is the need for a follow-on update of the subject matter. The concept and technology of today's A-V systems are very dynamic; a revision to this book should be written to assure up-to-date subject matter.


5 out of 5 stars More than a primer.   March 11, 2002
There are simplistic books on the subject; there are books obviously slanted towards off-the-wall gazillion-dollar weird systems -- and then there is this one. If you want to really understand what home theaters are all about, what is important and what isn't, take the time to read it through and absorb what the author is telling you. You will be rewarded.


5 out of 5 stars Highly recommended   March 11, 2002
3 out of 3 found this review helpful

Howard Ferstler's Home Theater Companion is informative, well-illustrated, and fun to read. I would highly recommend it to anyone interested in setting up a home theater system or high-quality audio equipment. The emphasis is on a bargain-oriented approach - how to get maximum quality for your dollar.pThis is the book for you if you are trying to figure out the answers to questions like: Should I get 2-way or 3-way speakers? Would a subwoofer improve my sound and how would I set one up? Which room should my home theater system go in? Where should I place my speakers? How powerful should my amp or receiver be? Which noise-reduction system should I use on my cassette deck? How can I add hi-fi VCR to my TV? How do I set up surround-sound? Should I get a widescreen TV? What CDs and DVDs can I use to test my system? What is an equalizer used for? Can I get speaker cable at a reasonable price? (Ferstler does a very good job of debunking very expensive speaker cables.) Should I biwire my speakers?pThere are excellent discussions of room acoustics, narrow vs wide dispersion speakers, and the Allison Effect (suckout in the midbass), useful tables comparing cassette/VCR/DCC/Minidisc/DAT formats for recording and VHS/LV/DVD formats for home theater, plus glossary, appendices, and bibliography. My only criticism is that the discussion of headphones could have been a little longer.pAll in all I thoroughly recommend this book. My copy is already worn through.


4 out of 5 stars Home Theater Companion review   March 10, 2002
David Gibbons (Santa Rosa, CA United States)
3 out of 4 found this review helpful

Ferstler's 1997 book now suffers somewhat from the relatively early publishing date, as the technologies of home theater have been evolving quickly. pThe book's greatest strength lies in explaining the basics which underlie the flash. I believe Fersler assumes that the reader has a basic technical knowledge, and that the reader wants to learn some of the nuts and bolts before going out shopping. Therefore, folks just looking for a simple-minded buyer's and hook-up guide will be disappointed. pIf, on the other hand, you want to understand some of the compromises which go into, say, speaker design, and want a discussion of the practicalities of home theater, this is a good investment.pI found that it providied me with a good grounding so that I can evaluate the cacaphony of on-line opinions.





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